CAGAYAN DE ORO CITY - Traditional Filipino medicine has endured centuries of colonization. Now, modern science is able to shed a different light on these ancient and oftentimes misunderstood practices, showing us that there are always new things to learn from the old ways.
In
the Philippines, there are over 1,500 known medicinal plants, with at least 120 that have been
validated for safety and efficacy using modern scientific standards. However,
despite the potential value of this pharmaceutical cornucopia, the country
still has a long way to go before traditional medicines are openly accepted in
a modern setting.
“There
are plants that are being used historically but whose potential have been
overlooked until now because of our biases, the way we favor or privilege
particular forms of healing over others,” said Felipe Jocano Jr., an assistant
professor at the University of the Philippines - Diliman Department of
Anthropology.
“We
should be looking at our own indigenous knowledge, giving it the value it
deserves, seeking ways to build on it to make it fit into what our present
[healthcare] systems [need], while giving due respect to the practitioners and
perhaps giving them also the respect and the recognition that they deserve,”
Jocano expounds.
In
2013 alone, the World Health Organization (WHO) estimated that around 60% of the world’s
population relies on traditional medicine, with 80% of the population in the
Philippines and other developing countries depending almost entirely on
traditional medical practices—on plants, in particular—for
primary health care.
“Teaching
people how to appreciate indigenous medicine is more than just teaching them,
‘okay, ito maganda ang indigenous medicine, ‘wag niyo pagtawanan.’ Mababaw lang
ito. You have to address people’s worldviews about other people as well. Not
only that, but finding ways to make use of this knowledge to help our people,”
Jocano said.
Filipino
scientists may be on the right track toward utilizing traditional medicinal
plants used to treat diseases. At the University of the Philippines –
Diliman College of Science (UPD-CS), researchers have discovered the potential
of some medicinal plants as possible cures for cancer and neurodegenerative
diseases.
Putak
Cancer is the leading
cause of illness and death worldwide. Recent statistics show 19.3 million new cases and 10
million cancer-related deaths in 2020 alone, accounting for nearly one in every
six deaths worldwide. In the Philippines, 189 of every 100,000 Filipinos are
affected by cancer, and four Filipinos die of cancer every hour, equivalent to
96 cancer patients every day.
UPD-CS
Institute of Biology (IB) Science Research Specialist Regina Joyce Ferrer and
her team discovered the potential of the Codiaeum luzonicum Merr.
plant, known as putak in Filipino, in killing drug-resistant cancer
cells without affecting healthy cells. Putak is commonly used by
indigenous Filipino communities to treat stomach aches and binat.
Ferrer
was inspired by our native biodiversity to research putak and its effect
on cancer cells. “The Philippines is very biodiverse, ang dami nating endemic
and native species. For example, itong putak, endemic siya sa Pilipinas. No one
else in the world except us Filipinos will be likely to fully explore the bioactivity
and the potentials of this plant,” she said.
She
noted the plant’s capability under laboratory conditions to kill cancer cells,
even normally drug-resistant ones, while leaving healthy cells alone. “Ang
usual approach kasi is may pang-inhibit ng drug resistance tapos may kasabay na
chemotherapeutic drug that can kill the cancer cells. But this plant [putak]
can do both at the same time,” Ferrer explained, adding that cancer cells’
ability to develop drug resistance is one of the major hurdles to treating all
kinds of cancers.
Philippine plants
Neurodegenerative
diseases, such as Alzheimer’s Disease (AD), are becoming top public health
concerns around the globe. In 2021 alone, the WHO listed
55 million cases of dementia worldwide, with AD comprising up to 70% of those
cases. Scientists say that countries such as the Philippines
need to implement premediated disease management to avoid the consequences of
emerging dementia cases.
A
group of scientists from the UPD-CS Institute of Chemistry (IC) led by Dr.
Evangeline Amor identified ten plants from Northern Samar that could
potentially be used as a treatment for Ad and other neurodegenerative diseases:
leaves from the sinta (Andrographis paniculata (Burm. f.) Nees), atis (Annona
squamosa Linn.), langka (Artocarpus heterophyllus Lam.), dollarweed
(Hydrocotyle umbellata Linn.), and sampa-sampalukan (Phyllanthus
niruri Linn.); stems from luya-luyahan (Curcuma zedoaria Rosc.) and
dapdap (Erythrina variegata var orientalis Linn.); and bark from
dapdap, balibago (Hibiscus tiliaceus Linn.), and santol (Sandoricum
koetjape Merr).
Indigenous
communities often use these plants to treat ailments such as fever, skin
diseases such as boils and wounds, abscesses, dysentery, abdominal pain, cough,
kidney stones, hepatic disorders, and ringworms.
Of
the ten plants studied, luya-luyahan and dapdap showed the most medicinal potential,
as extracts from their bark and stems were particularly effective at inhibiting
an enzyme that breaks down acetylcholine (ACh), a brain chemical that plays a
major role in memory, learning, attention, and involuntary muscle
movement.
“The
next step in the study is to establish the safety of the extracts and confirm
their activity in a secondary or orthogonal assay,” Dr. Amor said. “After
which, the non-toxic active extracts can then proceed to a drug-track wherein
the active constituents are isolated and identified or an herbal-track wherein
an herbal preparation or drug may be formulated.”
Traditional and modern medicine
Moreover,
Jocano called for more public awareness, appreciation, and protection of
endemic and native plants. “We should also be on guard about practices such as
what has been called ‘biomining,’ in which corporations practically exploit or
systematically harvest a particular territory ng mga plants nila, paying only a
pittance to the indigenous peoples there, but depriving them of their
resources.”
Exploring
Philippine plants used in traditional medicine can help advance modern
medicine. Treatments for various types of diseases may be just within people’s
reach. But as always, we should take responsible advantage of the Philippines’
rich biodiversity, according to Jocano.
“It has to be clear,
it has to be ethical, and it has to be protective and promote and advance the
indigenous peoples themselves. We have to work alongside the indigenous peoples
and traditional healers to address what they feel they need,” Jocano said, adding, traditional
and modern medicine are not separate entities; combining both practices might
even be the answer to treating some of the world’s most notoriously incurable
diseases. (Eunice Jean Patron, UPD-CS SciComm, Mindanao Examiner)
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